Robinson: The country deserves better than Donald Trump — much better

WASHINGTON — It's exhausting, I know, but don't let outrage fatigue numb you to the moral bankruptcy and gross incompetence of the Trump administration. This ugly departure from American norms and values must be opposed with sustained passion — and with the knowledge that things will probably get worse before they get better.

Heaven help us, look where we are. We have a president — commander in chief of the armed forces, ostensibly the leader of the free world — whose every word is suspect. President Trump is an inveterate liar. He dismisses provable facts as "fake news" and invents faux facts of his own that bear no relationship to the truth. He simply cannot be trusted.

We have a president whose North Star is naked self-interest, not the good of the country. Trump cares about his family, his company and little else. He dishonors the high office he holds, then reportedly spends hours each day railing against cable news coverage that he finds insufficiently respectful. His ego is a kind of psychic black hole that devours all who come into its orbit.

We have a president whose eldest son, son-in-law and campaign chairman met with emissaries who claimed to have been sent by the Russian government to deliver dirt on Trump's opponent, Hillary Clinton. Trump claimed on Twitter that "most politicians" would have gone to such a meeting, which is another lie. Try to find politicians who say they would have attended.

We have a president who fired the director of the FBI for continuing to investigate "this Russia thing" — a sophisticated effort by the Russian government, according to U.S. intelligence officials, to tip the election in Trump's favor. Will he also try to fire special counsel Robert Mueller? If he does, will Congress let him get away with it?

We have a president — was he made in Russia? — who has declared this to be "Made in America" week, despite the fact that so many of the retail products that bear his name and that of his daughter Ivanka are made in Mexico, China, Indonesia and Bangladesh. When asked about this irony by Politico, a White House spokeswoman responded that "we'll get back to you on that." They won't.

Trump has broken his promise to help the struggling middle class. After pledging health insurance "for everybody," he supported legislation that would strip more than 20 million people of coverage. His approval rating, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, has fallen to 36 percent — a historic low for a president at this point in his tenure. Yet Trump continues to enjoy strong support from self-identified Republicans, whose resentment against liberal "elites" he plays like a violin.

His administration is in shambles. Members of his inner circle snipe at one another via anonymous quotes to reporters. They compete for the president's favor not by doing their jobs well but by showing a willingness to defend anything he says and does, no matter how ridiculous. In the space of a week, his surrogates went from "the campaign had no meetings with Russians" to "there was a meeting but no collusion" to "collusion is not actually a crime." One wonders how they sleep at night.

Trump presents the world with something new: In place of American leadership, there is a vacuum. In keeping with the pattern set at the G-20 summit, adversaries will try to use Trump's ignorance to their advantage while allies try to nudge him into doing the right thing. The "madman theory" of foreign relations can only be employed effectively by a leader who is actually steadfast and serious; Trump is neither.

There is no point in looking to Republicans for salvation. House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell still hope to get Trump to sign into law massive cuts in taxes and entitlements. Many rank-and-file members fear Trump's loyal support among the base. The former "party of Lincoln" has adopted the moral code of the Oakland Raiders' late owner, Al Davis: "Just win, baby."

So that is what Democrats and independents have to do — win. As long as there are pro-Trump majorities in the House and Senate, there will be no real congressional oversight and no brake on an out-of-control president's excesses. Incumbency and gerrymandered districts mean that winning anti-Trump majorities in 2018 will be difficult. But not impossible.

The Democratic Party needs a plan, a message and a sense of urgency. Trump hopes to bully critics into submission, but the country is bigger than this one president. And much better.